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The Pooh Sticks

The official fan page!

About Me

Ridiculously over-productive, stupidly catchy and archly clever, Swansea's Pooh Sticks were one of the indie scene's greatest mirror images, a reflection of itself and, as the All Music Guide called them, "rock's most inside joke".Formed in late 1987 by Huw Williams (the son of ex-Man and Dire Straits drummer Terry Williams), it was almost as if The Pooh Sticks were a reaction against the studied misanthropy of The Smiths and their depressing ilk. They brought jangly bubblegum pop to the indie party, plus uncomplicated three-chord punk and a certain cutesy girlishness.Debut single On Tape poked good-humoured fun at indieboy-fandom, released on the Fierce Records imprint (run by their own manager, but with a reputation in the indie leftfield second to none with such notorious releases as a recording of Jesus And Mary Chain's North London Polytechnic crowd bust-up from 1986, and a recording of various interviews and random noises from the Stone Roses' Spike Island show in 1990).Fierce, in keeping with its tradition of bizarre publicity stunts, in 1988 released the box set of one-sided 7" singles featuring the infamous I Know Someone Who Knows Someone Who Knows Alan McGee Quite Well track.These tracks ended up on their first, self-titled LP, around which they toured the UK. They slotted into an indie framework in which The Beach Boys were held in as much esteem as Sonic Youth and this nod towards Americana saw them tour the States in 1990.A slew of albums, singles and collections were released on a number of labels, but they always made friends in good places: they had a relationship with top US indie Sympathy For The Record Industry for instance.The Great White Wonder LP in 1991 was expansive and inventive, bringing together all sorts of genres from 70s AOR to punk. Times were tough, though, and although they appealed to late-night Radio 1, most of the world was choosing between The Stone Roses or Nirvana. Although they shared influences with both, The Pooh Sticks didn't share the success.1993's ironically-titled LP Million Seller and 1995's sign-off Optimistic Fool, were both critically-acclaimed by those in the know, but most commentators agree with the benefit of hindsight that The Pooh Sticks were perpetually in the wrong place at the wrong time.Their legacy, however, is a series of great pop records that are, as The Rough Guide To Rock puts it, "to be reassessed as... overlooked gem[s] sometime in the [21st] century." (BBC Wales)

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 11/17/2005
Band Website: idiot-dog.com/music/pooh.sticks/indexp.html
Band Members: More than Fleetwood Mac.
Sounds Like:
Record Label: Fierce, 53rd & 3rd, Sympathy, Cheree, Zoo, Seed
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

Wikipedia says...

Pooh Sticks (band)The Pooh Sticks were an indie pop band, from Swansea, Wales recording between 1988 and 1995. They were notable for their jangly melodiousness and lyrics gently mocking the indie scen...
Posted by The Pooh Sticks on Wed, 02 Jul 2008 01:19:00 PST

Trouser Press says...

Less a group than a garishly mounted but sublimely subversive pop put-on, Wales' Pooh Sticks  formed in Swansea in 1987 by Steve Gregory (manager, songwriter, musician, producer, Fierce label owne...
Posted by The Pooh Sticks on Wed, 02 Jul 2008 01:15:00 PST

I know someone who knows someone...

...who knows the Pooh Sticks quite well, so if you've got any questions, or lucrative offers for a comeback tour, feel free to post them here and they may get back to you.
Posted by The Pooh Sticks on Wed, 02 Jul 2008 05:25:00 PST